Title: This is a PowerPoint presentation on fundamental math
1This is a PowerPoint presentation on fundamental
math tools that are useful in principles of
economics. A left mouse click or the enter
key will add an element to a slide or move you
to the next slide. The backspace key will take
you back one element or slide. The escape key
will get you out of the presentation.
ã R. Larry Reynolds
2Math Review
- Mathematics is a very precise language that is
useful to express the relationships between
related variables - Economics is the study of the relationships
between resources and the alternative outputs - Therefore, math is a useful tool to express
economic relationships
3Relationships
- A relationship between two or more variables can
be expressed as an equation, table or graph - equations graphs are continuous
- tables contain discrete information
- tables are less complete than equations
- it is more difficult to see patterns in tabular
data than it is with a graph -- economists
prefer equations and graphs
4Equations
- a relationship between two variables can be
expressed as an equation - the value of the dependent variable is
determined by the equation and the value of the
independent variable. - the value of the independent variable is
determined outside the equation, i.e. it is
exogenous
5Equations cont . . .
- An equation is a statement about a relationship
between two or more variables - Y fi (X) says the value of Y is determined by
the value of X Y is a function of X. - Y is the dependent variable
- X is the independent variable
- A linear relationship may be specified Y a
mX the function will graph as a straight
line - When X 0, then Y is a
- for every 1 unit change in X, Y changes by m
6Y 6 - 2X
- The relationship between Y and X is determined
for each value of X there is one and only one
value of Y function - Substitute a value of X into the equation to
determine the value of Y - Values of X and Y may be positive or negative,
for many uses in economics the values are
positive we use the NE quadrant
7Given the relationship, Y 6 - 2X,
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when X 0 then Y 6 this is Y-intercept
Y
sets of (X, Y)
A line that slopes from upper left to lower right
represents an inverse or negative relationship,
when the value of X increases, Y decreases!
(0, 6)
when X 1 then Y 4
(1, 4)
(2, 2)
(3, 0)
When X 2, then Y 2
The relationship for all positive values of X and
Y can be illustrated by the line AB
When X 3, Y 0, this is X-intercept
X
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Given a relationship, Y 6 - .5X
(0,6)
(1,5.5)
(2, 5)
(4,4)
(6,3)
For every one unit increase in the value of X, Y
decreases by one half unit. The slope of
this function is -.5! The Y-intercept is 6.
What is the X-intercept?
9For a relationship, Y 1 2X
When X0, Y1 (0,1)
When X 1, Y 3
slope 2
(1,3)
When X 2, Y 5
(2,5)
This function illustrates a positive
relationship between X and Y. For every one unit
increase in X, Y increases by 2 !
for a relationship Y -1 .5X
This function shows that for a 1 unit increase
in X, Y increases one half unit
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10Problem
- Graph the equation Y 9 - 3X
- What is the Y intercept? The slope?
- What is the X intercept? Is this a positive
(direct) relationship or negative (inverse)? - Graph the equation Y -5 2X
- What is the Y intercept? The slope?
- What is the X intercept? Is this a positive
(direct) relationship or negative (inverse)?
11Equations in Economics
- The quantity Q of a good that a person will buy
is determined partly by the price P of the
good. Note that there are other factors that
determine Q. - Q is a function of P, given a Price the
quantity of goods purchased is determined.
Q fp (P) - A function is relationship between two sets in
which there is one and only one element in the
second set determined by each element in the
first set.
12Relationship cont . . .
- Q fp (P) Q is a function of P
- Example Q 220 - 5P
- If P 0, then Q 220
- If P 1, then Q 215
- for each one unit increase in the value of P, the
value of Q decreases by 5
13Q 220 - 5P
- This is an inverse or negative relationship
- as the value of P increases, the value of Q
decreases - the Y intercept is 220, this is the value of Q
when P 0 - the X intercept is 44, this is the value of P
when Q 0 - This is a linear function, i.e. a straight
line - The slope of the function is -5
- for every 1 unit change in P, Q changes by 5 in
the opposite direction
14The equation provides the information to
construct a table. However, it is not possible to
make a table to include every possible value of
P. The table contains discrete data and
does not show all possible values!
15For the relationship, Q 220 - 5P, the
relationship can be graphed ...
PRICE
When the price is 44, 0 unit will be bought at
a price of 0, 220 units will be bought.
44
Notice that we have drawn the graph backwards,
Pindependent variable is placed on the Y-axis.
This is done because we eventually want to put
supply on the same graph and one or the other
must be reversed! Sorry!
QUANTITY
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16Slopes and Shifts
- Economists are interested in how one variable
the independent causes changes in another
variable the dependent - this is measured by the slope of the function
- Economists are also interested in changes in the
relationship between the variables - this is measured by shifts of the function
17Slope of a function or line
- The slope measures the change in the dependent
variable that will be caused by a change in the
independent variable - When, Y a m X m is the slope
18Slope of a Line
Y 6 -.5X
as the value of X increases from 2 to 4,
the value of Y decreases from 5 to 4
DY is the rise or change in Y caused by DXin
this case, -1
so, slope is -1/2 or -.5
DX is the run 2,
19Shifts of function
- When the relationship between two variables
changes, the function or line shifts - This shift is caused by a change in some variable
not included in the equation - the equation is a polynomial
- A shift of the function will change the
intercepts and in some cases the slope
20(Left click mouse to add material)
Given the function Y 6 - .5X,
21Shifts in functions
- In Principles of Economics most functions are
graphed in 2-dimensions, this means we have 2
variables. The dependent and independent - Most dependent variables are determined by
several or many variables, this requires
polynomials to express the relationships - a change in one of these variables which is not
shown on a 2-D graph causes the function to
shift
22Slope and Production
- The output of a good is determined by the amounts
of inputs and technology used in production - example of a case where land is fixed and
fertilizer is added to the production of
tomatoes. - with no fertilizer some tomatoes, too much
fertilizer and it destroys tomatoes
23The maximum output of T possible with all
inputs and existing technology is 10 units with 6
units of F
tons of tomatoes
With the 3rd unit of F, T increases to 9
With 2 units of F, the output of T increases to 8
With 1 unit of Fertilizer F, we get 6 tons
The increase in tomatoes DT caused by DF is
3, this is the slope
With no fertilizer we get 3 tons of tomatoes
use of more F causes the tomatoes to burn and
output declines
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FERTILIZER
24Slope and Marginal Product
- Since the output of tomatoes T is a function of
Fertilizer F , the other inputs and technology
we are able to graph the total product of
Fertilizer TPf - From the TPf, we can calculate the marginal
product of fertilizer MPf - MPf is the DTPf caused by the DF
25Given T f (F, . . . ), MPf DTPf/DF
DTPf 1, DF 3 1/3 _at_ .33 this is
an approximation because DFgt1
DTPf -1, DF 2 -1/2 -.5
Fertilizer F Tomatoes T 0 3
MPf slope 3
technically, this is between 0 and the first
unit of F
1 6
2 8
2
3 9
1
6 10
.33
rise/run 3
8 9
-.5 a negative slope!
DTPf 3, DF 1 3/1 3 slope 3
DTPf 2, DF 1 2/1 2
DTPf 1, DF 1 1/1 1
26Given a functional relationship such as Q 220
- 5P, we can express the equation for P as a
function of Q
Think of an equation as a balance scale, what
you do to one side of the equation you must do to
the other in order to maintain balance
Q 220 - 5P
subtract 220 from both sides
-220 Q -5P
divide every term in both sidesby -5
or, P 44 - .2 Q
The equation P 44 - .2Q is the same as
Q 220 - .5P
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27Slope Calculus
- In economics we are interested in how a change in
one variable changes another - How a change in price changes sales. How a
change in an input changes output. How a change
in output changes cost. etc. - The rate of change is measured by the slope of
the functional relationship - by subtraction the slope was calculated as rise
over run where rise DY Y1 - Y2 and run
DX X1 - X2,
28DerivativeThere are still more slides on this
topic
- When we have a nonlinear function, a simple
derivative can be used to calculate the slope of
the tangent to the function at any value of the
independent variable - The notation for a derivative is written
29Summary
- a derivative is the slope of a tangent at a point
on a function - is the rate of change, it measures the
change in Y caused by a change in X as the change
in X approaches 0 - in economics jargon, the slope or rate of
change is the marginal
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31Can slope vary along a curve?
- Yes, the slope of a curve can vary along the curve
32Y
4
3
A
2
Y2
1
X
X30
10
20
30
40
33Y
20
15
A
Y
10
-10
5
X
X50
25
50
75
100
34END
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